JENNIFER ADELAKUN v. ADENIYI ADELAKUN
No. 33
In the Appellate Court of Maryland
September 26, 2024
Graeff, J.
Sеptember Term, 2024. Circuit Court for Howard County, Case No. C-13-FM-23-001251. REPORTED. Filed: September 26, 2024.
APPEALABILITY—INTERLOCUTORY ORDER
PENDENTE LITE CHILD SUPPORT & ALIMONY
An interlocutory order denying pendente lite alimony and child support is not a final judgment, and it is not appealable as an order for the payment of money pursuant to
REPORTED
IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF MARYLAND
No. 33
September Term, 2024
JENNIFER ADELAKUN
v.
ADENIYI ADELAKUN
Graeff,
Tang,
Eyler, Deborah S.
(Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),
JJ.
Opinion by Graeff, J.
Filed: September 26, 2024
Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.
This
For the reasons set forth below, we shall dismiss this interlocutory appeal.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Mother and Father were married on August 4, 2016. They have three young children together.
I.
Initial Filings
On July 19, 2023, Mother filed a Complaint for Absolute Divorce By Mutual Consent in the Circuit Court for Howard County. She asked the court to, among other things, grant her primary physical, and sole legal, custody of the children, child support (retroactively, pendente lite and permanently), and alimony (retroactively, pendente lite, rehabilitative, and permanently).1 In her complaint, Mother alleged that she was unemployed and not currently earning any income. She stated that she required spousal support from Father, who earned “enough to provide spousal suppоrt . . . including payment of the mortgage on the Marital Home.”
On August 14, 2023, Father filed a Counter-Complaint for Limited Divorce, seeking sole legal, and primary physical, custody of the children, or alternatively, shared physical
custody, with Father “being the primary.” Father also asked the court to award him child support for an amount “in accordance with the Maryland Child Support Guidelines, or an amount above the guidelines, if applicable.” Father alleged that Mother was a licensed attorney, gainfully employed, and “capable of contributing to the support of the minor children.”
II.
Pendente Lite Hearing
On October 31, 2023, the magistrate held a pendente lite hearing. Mother requested primary custody of the children, use and possession of the marital home, $8,200 a month from Father, in addition to his continuing to pay the mortgage on the marital home, and $50,000 in prospective attorney‘s fees. Mother testified that she earned $520 per month from a daycare center she owned, and this was “the only income that [she was] generating.” She did not receive additional income, owner‘s draws, commissions, or bonuses from the company.
Mother also had an ownership interest in J. Anukem and Associates, a law firm that was “reorganized to be a consulting firm.” She stopped practicing law in December 2021, and the new business had not yet received any contracts. The family‘s 2021 amended tax return indicated that the gross receipts from her law firm were $955,269, and there was a profit of $109,918, which she attributed as earned income. She testified that, at the time of the hearing, she was not receiving any income from the firm.
Mother had also been a CEO and рroject manager at Phase V Consulting, an IT consulting company. Mother‘s W-2 from
from this company. Mother testified that she stepped down from her CEO position in June 2023 because the business had “incurred a lot of debt,” and she was unable to “keep up with it.” She “transferred the business” to her business partner, Kim Kight.2
Mother initially testified that she owned three investment properties with Ms. Kight, but she did not receive any income from these properties. On cross-examination, Mother stated she owned seven investment properties. The amended financial statement Mother submitted into evidence noted ownership of four properties.
Mother‘s financial statement also listed her and the children‘s monthly expenses. These expenses included a “domestic assistance/housekeepеr,” who came to the home five days a week. Mother believed that Father was paying the mortgage on the marital home, and she “was told” that Father was providing the family‘s health insurance. She was not paying anything toward the mortgages on her investment properties. Ms. Kight was paying Mother‘s car note, cell phone bill, “and other expenses,” and Ms. Kight had given her a $500,000 loan to “try to get J. Anukem and Associates up and running as a consulting firm” and “for living expenses.” Mother had pre-paid the children‘s tuition expenses for the 2023-2024 school year, and she had pre-paid for a cruise scheduled for December 2023. Mother testified that she was unable to support herself or her children with her current income. On cross-examination, Mother stated that Ms. Kight and Ms. Kight‘s daughter were residing rent-free in thе marital home, which was a 12,000 square-foot-home with seven bedrooms, eleven bathrooms, and two kitchens.
Father testified that he is a psychiatrist, and he owns his own business. Because Mother had filed several protective orders against him, one of which resulted in a brief incarceration on October 16, 2023, Father had lost “almost every single contract” with clients. He was on probation for one of his contracts, and another client with whom he had a contract had reduced his working time to two hours per week.
Father testified that he could not afford to pay for the housekeeper and nanny because, due to the events that had happened, he had lost contracts and was working reduced hours. His business paid for the mortgage on the marital home, aрproximately $10,500 per month, and he paid for the family‘s health insurance, approximately $2,400 per month. At the time of the hearing, Father owed $450,000 in student loans.
III.
Magistrate‘s Report and Recommendations
On December 6, 2023, the magistrate issued her report and recommendations. As relevant to this appeal, she denied Mother‘s requests for pendente lite alimony and pendente lite child support. With respect to Mother‘s current income, the magistrate noted that Mother testified that she earned $550 per month from the daycare that she owned, but documents that Mother provided showed that she earned $628 biweekly and was paid at a rate below the minimum wage of $7.85 per hour. The magistrate noted that Mother “transferred the business Phase [V] Consulting to the name of her business partner that lives with her,” Kimberly Kight, “at the same time she filed for divorce.” The magistrate then found, as fоllows:
[M]other‘s statements regarding a complete lack of ongoing income lack[] credibility and [are] not supported by other credible evidence. Mother‘s testimony regarding her income and employment are contradictory and not credible. The portions of Mother‘s testimony and evidence that is credible does not prove by a preponderance of the evidence that she has a [pendente lite] financial need.
With respect to Father‘s income, the magistrate found that:
[F]ather‘s statements regarding a decrease in income [are] more credible, but also lack[] substantial evidentiary support. Father states that his employment has been affected by the repeated and recent filings for protective and peace orders against him as well as a criminal complaint filed against him for which he was аrrested. All of these filings are regarding the strife between the mother and father. None of the cases filed against him are proven to have been sustained against him. There is no peace or protective order against him and there is no criminal conviction against him. It is reasonable to believe that his employment has been affected by the recent significant court filings against him.
In conclusion, the magistrate found:
Prior to the initiation of the litigation between the parties, both parties earned substantial income from several business ventures each. They are each capable of earning significant income and each able to cover their own expenses during the [pendente lite] period. Neither parent has demonstrated a credible financial need for [pendente lite] alimony at this point in the litigation. The parties’ recent history indicates this case as an above guidelines case regarding child support. Both parties are capable of supporting the children while they are in their custody. The parties should share in the payment of the housing for the benefit of the children but should not exchange child support under current circumstances.
There should be no, at this time, exchange of support between the parties for alimony or for child support. The parties should share in the cost of the children‘s housing for the benefit of the children.
The magistrate recommended that the parties be granted pendente lite joint legal, and shared physical, custody of the children; she recommended that the parties have custody at the family home on alternate weeks. The magistrate recommended that the
requests for pendente lite alimony and child support be denied, and Mother and Father each pay one half of the mortgage.
IV.
Exceptions to the Magistrate‘s Report and Recommendations
On December 15, 2023, Mother filed Exceptions to the Report and Recommendations of the Family Magistrate. Mother argued that the magistrate “erred by not making a finding as to the parties’ respective incomes and the parties’ expenses, and she abused her discretion in not awarding [Mother] pendente lite alimony and child support.” Father filed a response in opposition.
V.
Exceptions Hearing and Pendente Lite Order
On February 13, 2024, the parties appeared before the circuit court for a hearing on Mother‘s exceptions. The court stated that it had thoroughly reviewed the Magistrate‘s Report and Recommendations,
Father noted that the magistrate found that Mother‘s statements regarding a complete lack of ongoing income lacked credibility and were not supported by other credible evidence. Counsel noted that the $6,500 a month Mother was paying for a housekeeper was excessive for a person who did not have a source of income. Mother also had “prepaid the private school preschool tuition for two of the children,” approximately
$52,000, which indicated that there was not a pendente lite need. Additionally, Mother had prepaid “for a Disney vacation for the minor children and her,” while also listing, as a recurring monthly expеnse, $1,200 for vacation, which is a lot for someone not making any income. Father concluded that “there was ample evidence before” the magistrate that demonstrated that Mother “had ample funds at her disposal, and there was not a pendente lite need for child support nor alimony.”
Mother responded that she had been “liquidating assets in order to maintain the status quo because her income is not what it was years ago.” She stated that it was “in the children‘s best interest that there be some sort of support being paid on a pendente lite basis.”
At the conclusion of these arguments, the court stated that nothing had been shown to lead to the conclusion that any of the magistrate‘s findings were clearly erroneous. The court continued:
[T]he Magistrate made specific findings in terms of the credibility and findings of the parties in terms of pаst incomes, and I think kind of lack of clarity as to where things are now. But did based on those first level findings, found at this time that . . . [Mother failed to meet her burden to prove] that there was a need on [her] part. That there was based on what had been paid for. I think that there was an ability to pay. And at the [pendente lite] level, you‘re looking at need versus ability to pay, and without a need, there is not a [pendente lite] alimony imposed. So, I do not believe that she abused her discretion in any manner in not awarding [pendente lite] alimony.
In regards to the child support, there was varying testimony obviously different credibility findings made in regards to that. But that both parties were contributing to the children‘s needs and so on. And certainly, made findings about what assets obviously they had in their possession and that they could support the children. So, I don‘t believe there was an abuse of discretion in . . . not awarding the child support at this time. This is a [pendente lite] basis. It‘s not a permanent basis. And especially with
awarding the . . . nesting agreement of keeping the children in the family home and on a week-on/week-off basis. I think that came into her consideration. I do not believe that she abused her discretion in any manner.
And then subsequently, taking my own look at the view of what was presented at the Magistrate‘s hearing and the recommendations that she made, I do believe that they are in the best interest of the minor children. And I believe the provisions outlined are prudent for the current situation, the pendente lite period.
I am going to deny the exceptions.
On March 4, 2024, the court signed an order, adopting the magistrate‘s recommendation denying the requests for
This timely appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Before addressing Mother‘s arguments, we must address whether this appeal is properly before us. “[U]nless constitutionally authorized, appellate jurisdiction ‘is determined entirely by statute,’ and therefore, a right of appeal only exists to the extent it has been ‘legislatively granted.‘” Mayor & City Council of Balt. v. ProVen Mgmt., Inc., 472 Md. 642, 665 (2021) (quoting Gisriel v. Ocean City Bd. of Supervisors of Elections, 345 Md. 477, 485 (1997)). Pursuant to
To be considered a final judgment, an order from the court must satisfy the following conditions: “(1) it must be intended by the court as an unqualified, final disposition of the matter in controversy; (2) it must adjudicate or complete the adjudication of all claims against all parties; and (3) the clerk must make a proper record of it on the docket.” Waterkeeper All., Inc. v. Md. Dep‘t of Agric., 439 Md. 262, 278 (2014) (quoting Rohrbeck v. Rohrbeck, 318 Md. 28, 41 (1989)). Accord Bartenfelder v. Bartenfelder, 248 Md. App. 213, 230 (2020), cert. denied, 472 Md. 5 (2021). Here, the divorce proceedings are still pending, and accordingly, the circuit court‘s order denying pendente lite alimony and child support is not a final judgment.
“This Court does not acquire jurisdiction over an appeal unless it is taken from a final judgment or from an interlocutory order that falls within one of the exceptions to the final judgment requirement.” Bartenfelder, 248 Md. App. at 229. There are three exceptions to the general rule that a party can appeal only from a final judgment. These exceptions are as follows: (1) an appeal from an interlocutory order specifically authorized by a statute; (2) an appeal from an interlocutory order that falls under the collateral order doctrine; and (3) an appeal permitted under
Prior to oral argument, we issued a Show Cause Order asking the parties to address why this interlocutory appeal should not be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Mother responded by arguing that this Court has jurisdiction on two grounds. First, she argued that the appeal was proper pursuant to
appeal of an order for the payment of money. Alternatively, she argued that, pursuant to our authority under
I.
An Order to Pay Money
A party may appeal from any of the following interlocutory orders entered by a circuit court in a civil case:
* * *
(3) An order:
* * *
(v) For the sale, conveyance, or delivery of real or personal property or the payment of money, or the refusal to rescind or discharge such an order, unless the delivery or payment is directed to be made to a receiver appointed by the court.
(Emphasis added). Pursuant to this authority, the appellate courts have held that cases involving interlocutory orders for the payment of pendente lite child support and alimony are appealable. See, e.g., In re Katherine C., 390 Md. 554, 557 n.4 (2006) (pendente lite order for child support); Frey v. Frey, 298 Md. 552, 556-57 (1984) (pendente lite alimony order); Bussell v. Bussell, 194 Md. App. 137, 147 (2010) (pendente lite orders for child support and alimony); Lieberman v. Lieberman, 81 Md. App. 575, 582-83 (1990) (portions of order regarding child support and related counsel fees).
In this case, however, the court did not issue an order for the payment of money. Rather, it denied Mother‘s request that Father be ordered to pay pendente lite alimony and child support.
Nevertheless, Mother contends that the court‘s order is appealable as an order for the payment of money, for several reasons. First, she argues that the language adopted by the General Assembly in 1841, permitting appeals for the payment of money, was not rеstricted to affirmative relief because the 1828 edition of Webster‘s Dictionary shows that, at that time, the word “for” “was a broadly inclusive word,” which “encompassed both positive and negative determinations.” Second, she asserts that “Maryland courts have always viewed” the statute‘s language “as encompassing the denial of monetary support in family law cases.” Finally, Mother argues that dismissing this appeal would “thwart Marylanders’ justified expectations.”
Father contends that Mother‘s appeal from the order denying her request for
In construing
As the Supreme Court of Maryland recently explained:
Where statutory language “is ambiguous and thus subject to more than onе reasonable interpretation, or where the language is unambiguous when read in isolation, but ambiguous when considered in the context of a larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process.” Buarque de Macedo v. Auto. Ins. Co. of Hartford, 480 Md. 200, 216, 280 A.3d 679 (2022) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In addition, we “check our interpretation against the consequences of alternative readings of the text[,]” Bell v. Chance, 460 Md. 28, 53, 188 A.3d
930 (2018), which “grounds the analysis.” In re O.P., 470 Md. 225, 255, 235 A.3d 40 (2020).
Syed v. Lee, No. 7, 2024 WL 3999041, at *23 (Md. Aug. 30, 2024).
We begin with the words of the statute, which permits an appeal from an order for “the payment of money.”
Mother contends, however, that when the General Assembly initially enacted legislation in 1841 authorizing an appeal from an interlocutory order, the word “for” had many meanings, including “against.”4 Therefore, she argues that this appeal, which denied a request for an order for the payment of money, is appealable.
(last visited Sept. 9, 2024). To the extent that the dictionary definitions of “for” make the phrase “for the payment of money” ambiguous, we must “resolve the ambiguity by searching for legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process.” Westminster Mgmt., LLC v. Smith, 486 Md. at 645 (quoting Bennett v. Harford Cnty., 483 Md. 461, 486 (2023)).
The Maryland appellate courts have extensively discussed the history of
Provided always, that the execution of any decree or order of the chancery, or any county court for the sale, conveyance, or delivery of possession, of real or personal property, or the payment of money, or the bringing of money into court, or the appointment of a receiver, or the opening of any way public or private, from which the right of an immediate appeal is taken away by this act, shall not be suspended or staid, unless a prayer for an appeal be entered on the docket, or filed among the proceedings in the cause, and bond in such penalty as the chancellor, or county courts, (as the case may be) may prescribe, with good and suffiсient security, to be approved by the chancellor or county court, shall be given.
Id. at 280 (emphasis added) (quoting 1830 Md. Laws 198-99). Thus, although there was no right to an immediate appeal of an interlocutory equity order for the payment of money, the court could stay the effect of such an order pending the conclusion of the entire case. Id.
In 1841, the General Assembly passed an act to restore appellate jurisdiction over certain interlocutory appeals from courts of equity. Id. The Act of 1841 stated, in relevant part, as follows:
[S]o much of the first section of the said act, as takes away the immediate right of appeal from any decree or order of the court of chancery, or any county court sitting as a court of equity, for the sale, conveyance or delivery of real or personal property, or the payment of money . . . be, and the same is hereby repealed; and that from any such decree or order heretofore passed, or hereafter to be passed, the right of an immediate appeal is hereby given.
Id. at 280-81 (emphasis added) (quoting 1841 Md. Laws ix). This statutory right to appeal has been modified
As the Supreme Court of Maryland explained in Anthony Plumbing, 298 Md. at 20, the history of
These characteristics of a traditional equity order for the payment of money differ markedly from those of a typical judgment at law for the payment of money. The latter type of judgment “may settle the respective rights of the parties . . . but it does not purport to order anyone to do anything.” Ibid. It is “not immediately enforceable,” id. at 286, 422 A.2d 409.
Id. Indeed, “[t]he distinctive feature of the kind of equitable order described in Anthony Plumbing is that the court has available to it . . . the sanction of imprisonment for contempt.” Simmons v. Perkins, 302 Md. 232, 236 (1985). If “imprisonment for contempt is not available to the trial court for any violation of its order,” the order is not equitable in nature and, therefore, does not fall within the ambit of the statute. Id.
The legislative history of the statute and the appellate courts’ interpretation of the statute lead to thе conclusion that
The conclusion that an interlocutory appeal from an order for the payment of money applies only to an order requiring a party to take affirmative action to pay is supported by the Supreme Court of Maryland‘s interpretation of the parallel provision in
If an order for the sale of property “necessarily entails” a requirement that property be sold, an order for the payment of money necessarily requires that money be paid. Each portion of
Opinions from other jurisdictions support this conclusion. In Whittington v. Magnante, 30 N.E.3d 767, 769 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015), the Court of Appeals for Indiana held that an order denying a request for one party to pay expenses was not appealable as an order “for the payment of money” because the order did not “directly order one of the parties to pay a sum to another party.” Similarly, in Randall v. Randall, 126 So. 484, 484 (Miss. 1930), the Supreme Court of Mississippi addressed whether Mrs. Randall could appeal the lower court‘s order denying her request for pendente lite alimony pursuant to a statute allowing an interlocutory appeal from an order “whereby money is required to be
paid.” The court held that the denial of the request for pendente lite alimony was not appealable because the order did “not require the payment of any money by appellant.” Id.
In 2012 Props., LLC v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist., No. 05-15-01002-CV, 2016 WL 3902585, at *2 (Tex. App. July 14, 2016), the Court of Appeals of Texas addressed the appealability of an order pursuant to
These cases support our conclusion that an order is appealable as an order for the payment of money pursuant to
Mother next asserts that policy reasons support allowing appeals from both orders to pay money and orders denying a request to pay money with respect to pendente lite claims for alimony and child support. It is well established, however, “that ‘we neither add nor delete words to a clear and unambiguous statute to give it a meaning not reflected by the words that the General Assembly used or engage in forced or subtle interpretation in an
may not “rewrite the law for [the General Assembly], no matter how just or fair we may think such a new law or public policy would be. The formidable doctrine of separation of powers demands that the courts remain in the sphere that belongs uniquely to the judiciary—that of interpreting, but not creating, the statutory law.”
Doe v. Cath. Relief Servs., 484 Md. 640, 675 (2023) (quoting Stearman v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 381 Md. 436, 454 (2004)).
II.
Maryland Rule 8-602(g)(1)(C)
Mother next contends that, if this Court holds that this appeal “falls outside” of
judgment under
Father objects to this Court entering a final judgment pursuant to
(a) Generally—Except as provided in section (b) of this Rule, an order or other form of decision, however designated, that adjudicates fewer than all of the claims in an action (whether raised by original claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim), or that adjudicates less than an entire claim, or that adjudicates the rights and liabilities of fewer than all the parties to the action:
(1) is not a final judgment;
(2) does not terminate the action as to any of the claims or any of the parties; and
(3) is subject to revision at any time before the entry of a judgment that adjudicates all of the claims by and against all of the parties.
(b) When Allowed—If the court expressly determines in a written order that there is no just reason for delay, it may direct in the order the entry of a final judgment: (1) as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties; or
(2) pursuant to
Rule 2-501(f)(3) , for some but less than all of the amount requested in a claim seeking money relief only.
Subsectiоn (b), therefore, “authorizes a trial court to enter a final judgment ‘as to one or more but fewer than all of the claims or parties’ when the court ‘expressly determines in a written order that there is no just reason for delay.‘” Grier v. Heidenberg, 255 Md. App. 506, 516 (2022) (quoting
If the circuit court properly exercises its discretion under the Rule and directs the entry of final judgment in a case to which the rule applies, the order is immediately appealable. See In re Tr. Under Item Ten of Last Will & Testament of Lanier, No. 737, 2024 WL 3593599, at *6 (Md. App. July 31, 2024) (“[I]mmediate appeals permitted under
duplication of efforts and costs in cases involving multiple claims or multiple parties may be avoided.” Murphy v. Steele Software Sys. Corp., 144 Md. App. 384, 393 (2002) (quoting Md.-Nat‘l Cap. Park & Plan. Comm‘n v. Smith, 333 Md. 3, 7 (1993)). This process should be “reserved for ‘the infrequent harsh case.‘” Id. (quoting Allstate Ins. Co. v. Angeletti, 71 Md. App. 210, 218 (1987)). Accord Heidenberg, 255 Md. App. at 516 (quoting Arthur, supra, at 70, § 35).
Here, the circuit court did not enter judgment pursuant to
If the appellate court determines that the order from which the appeal is taken was not a final judgment when the notice of appeal was filed but that the lower court had discretion to direct the entry of a final judgment pursuant to
Rule 2-602 (b) , the appellate court, as it finds appropriate, may (A) dismiss the appeal, (B) remand the case for the lower court to decide whether to direct the entry of a final judgment, (C) enter a final judgment on its own initiative, оr (D) if a final judgment was entered by the lower court after the notice of appeal was filed, treat the notice of appeal as if filed on the same day as, but after, the entry of the judgment.
“Circumstances where an appellate court may” exercise its discretion by “certify[ing] an order are even more limited” than those available to the circuit court. Waterkeeper All., Inc. v. Md. Dep‘t of Agric., 439 Md. 262, 287 (2014). “[N]ot only is the appellate court limited to scenarios where the trial court could have certified the order, but the
the very infrequent harsh case.‘” Id. at 288 (quoting Diener Enters. Inc. v. Miller, 266 Md. 551, 556 (1972)).
Although we have authority to enter judgment on our own initiative under
If a party believes that the circumstances warrant an immediate appeal, the request should ordinarily be presented first to the trial court—the preferred “dispatcher“—for consideration. That court not only has greater knowledge than an appellate court regarding the overall effect of an immediate appeal but a grеater interest in whether the case remaining before it should be “put on ice” while an interlocutory appeal proceeds. Except in the most extraordinary circumstance, predominantly where the problem of an open claim is a more or less technical one that was overlooked by the appellant when the appeal was noted and which, if spotted then, would likely have been corrected, the trial court should not be by-passed in this regard, as was deliberately done in this case.
Here, the parties did not ask the circuit court to exercise its authority under
we decline to exercise our discretion to consider the entry of a final judgment on an order that was not certified as a final judgment by the circuit court.8
Because the order appealed from is not a final judgment, and appellant has failed to show that it falls within one of the exceptions allowing interlocutory appeals, we will not consider the merits of the issue raised at this time. Accordingly, we shall dismiss the appeal.
APPEAL DISMISSED. COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANT.
Notes
Although we would be inclined to hold that a denial of an order requesting pendente lite alimony and child support is not appealable under the collateral order doctrine, as other jurisdictions have held, see Fried v. Fried, 501 A.2d 211, 215 (Pa. 1985); Bowie v. Nicholson, 705 A.2d 290, 292 (D.C. 1998), because this argument was not made until oral argument, we will not decide this issue. See Oak Crest Vill., Inc. v. Murphy, 379 Md. 229, 241 (2004) (It is well settled “that ‘if a point germane to the appeal is not adequately raised in a party‘s brief, the court may, and ordinarily should, decline to address it‘“) (quoting DiPino v. Davis, 354 Md. 18, 56 (1999)); Health Servs. Cost Rev. Comm‘n v. Lutheran Hosp. of Md., Inc., 298 Md. 651, 664 (1984) (“[A] question not presented or argued in an appellant‘s brief is waived or abandoned and is, therefore, not properly preserved for review.“).
